I had been using a Windows OEM Comfort Curve 2000 keyboard black for the last 6 years... but felt like something less dusty and covered in coffee. The only semi-clicky keyboard that wasn't wireless was either the G110 or a Comfort Curve 3000 and I didn't like the comfort curve 3000 as it was too curvy compared to the 2000. Asides from the lame marketing on the G110 box, the keyboard is pretty nice to type on.

Ditch it and get yourself a good mechanical keyboard....I love my razor black widow ultamite Once you go mechanical and feel the feedback the keys give you you will never go back.

So fair have not found a wireless mechanical keyboard......for my HTPCs I am using Logitech k400s with a laptop trackpad on them where a num pad would go. But I also use a mouse most of the time with my HTPCs....if gaming a wired old g5 surfing and light gaming a wireless mouse is used.

I suspect that quite a few of the die-hard mechanical fans learned how to type on them when they were younger. To me, nothing else has ever felt quite right. The younger converts are people who really like the tactile feedback and don't mind the noise. It's a personal thing.

yogibbear wrote:

yogibbear wrote:unless I force the USB ports to run slower

Yeah, I know. It is pissing me off.

Duh. I should've re-read the OP before posting.

I suppose if there isn't a BIOS update to fix this, you could shove a USB add-in card into an unused PCI or PCIe slot to get high-speed USB capability back.

Or sell the G110 to A_Pickle, and get something else that plays nice with your motherboard...

I suspect that quite a few of the die-hard mechanical fans learned how to type on them when they were younger. To me, nothing else has ever felt quite right. The younger converts are people who really like the tactile feedback and don't mind the noise. It's a personal thing.

Mostly this. I grew up on a Model M(1988 - 1391401). I didn't even know how lucky I was.

PopcornMachine wrote:I have been using a G110 on win7 for quite a while, and the only problem I've had is it been a little finicky about the keyboard or mouse being in the same USB slot they were in before.

This seems to be a generic Windows issue. Why does it matter what USB port a device is plugged into? I have no idea why the OS cares, but it is what it is.

PopcornMachine wrote:I have been using a G110 on win7 for quite a while, and the only problem I've had is it been a little finicky about the keyboard or mouse being in the same USB slot they were in before.

This seems to be a generic Windows issue. Why does it matter what USB port a device is plugged into? I have no idea why the OS cares, but it is what it is.

Historically Windows has remembered hardware from one boot to the next whilst Linux has done hardware rediscovery from scratch on each boot. I can't think why Windows would insist on the path matching exactly but I don't work in Redmond...

As for the mechanical keyboard hype " i was a non believer" Until i went into the store a tried one out. It is amazing how much they cut down on mistakes since you can feel the keys click into your finger about a third of the way down and you then know that the letter or keystroke is complete. Where a cheap rubberdome keyboard "like i am using right now" i have to make sure the keys bottom out for the most part to make sure all of my typing comes up the way i want it to. BTW they do make quiet mechanical keyboards, but i like a little bit of noise. Plus i look at it like a investment, No matter how many Computers i go through i am sure the mechanical razor B widow Ult keyboard will live on with every new build for a very long time. It also makes a good self defense weapon, it is very heavy and well built.

Enjoy your new keyboard, mine only lights up blue hi low or for some reason pulsating....your looks like a christmas tree:)

PopcornMachine wrote:I have been using a G110 on win7 for quite a while, and the only problem I've had is it been a little finicky about the keyboard or mouse being in the same USB slot they were in before.

This seems to be a generic Windows issue. Why does it matter what USB port a device is plugged into? I have no idea why the OS cares, but it is what it is.

Historically Windows has remembered hardware from one boot to the next whilst Linux has done hardware rediscovery from scratch on each boot. I can't think why Windows would insist on the path matching exactly but I don't work in Redmond...

Presonus's USB audio interfaces are that way, too (at least the Audiobox USB is, and to make matters worse if you unplug it while the system is on or have it unplugged at startup, you have to uninstall and reinstall the driver to get it to work right again - and that's even if you plug it into the same port; that makes its intended use of a mobile device really hard to live with).

Most of the time in my experience, USB devices don't care what port they're in but every so often the driver is...funky, I guess.

I do not understand what I do. For what I want to do, I do not do. But what I hate, I do.

I had a weird problem with a Gigabyte P55-UD4P motherboard. I had problems trying to get a new iPod Touch to properly work with it. All kinds of strange problems with the device disappearing, reappearing, or just not being found. I wasn't able to get it to sync. Since the iPod Touch was new, I thought it was the device. After some Google-Fu, I found out that reflashing the BIOS would fix the problem.

Dealing with iTunes in general is an exercise in frustration WITHOUT having to deal with that kind of nonsense.

just brew it! wrote:This seems to be a generic Windows issue. Why does it matter what USB port a device is plugged into? I have no idea why the OS cares, but it is what it is.

Historically Windows has remembered hardware from one boot to the next whilst Linux has done hardware rediscovery from scratch on each boot. I can't think why Windows would insist on the path matching exactly but I don't work in Redmond...

It speeds up the boot process since Windows doesn't have to check all of the device drivers and hardware. The downside is that hardware detection doesn't run until the OS is fully loaded, and with XP that meant a user was logged in. Vista and 7 are better about this, and they will detect the mouse and keyboard, at least, after a few minutes.